Rec me please? WWll novels by participants

ConversesSecond World War History

Afegeix-te a LibraryThing per participar.

Rec me please? WWll novels by participants

Aquest tema està marcat com "inactiu": L'últim missatge és de fa més de 90 dies. Podeu revifar-lo enviant una resposta.

1aquascum
abr. 10, 2016, 2:28 am

Hello Group, happy to have found you!
I'm not entirely sure it's permissible to ask for book recommendations, but...

What I'm interested in are WW2 novels/stories written by people involved. Or written using journals/letters by people involved.

I know of German ones, but not translated (as far as I know). Anything in English?

2Ammianus
abr. 10, 2016, 3:27 am

3aquascum
Editat: abr. 11, 2016, 10:04 am

*headdesk* and Alexander Kent, how did I forget...

Also found Bomber by Len Deighton

4VonKar
Editat: abr. 16, 2016, 10:11 am

Guy Sajer, The Forgotten Soldier (not really a novel though, rather an autobiography)

5Jestak
abr. 17, 2016, 2:53 am

Das Boot by Lothar-Gunther Bucheim has been translated into English (and, of course, made into a memorable film).

6aquascum
abr. 17, 2016, 4:48 am

Anything by English/American authors/participants? I do have the unfair advantage of just being able to read the German stuff... being German...

7VonKar
abr. 17, 2016, 5:14 am

In that case, I'd surely suggest Brave Men and Here's Your War by the American WWII journalist Ernie Pyle.

8aquascum
abr. 17, 2016, 5:12 pm

Great, thanks!

9chrisharpe
Editat: abr. 20, 2016, 4:40 am

Quartered Safe Out Here, about GMF's experiences in Burma, is one of my favourites - for me, way better than his fiction. I've listed to the audiobook - read by the author in his Geordie brogue - three times and I never re-read books! I went on to read Slim's autobiography Defeat Into Victory on the back of it. Evelyn Waugh's Sword of Honour trilogy is a classic. Not a novel, but With the Old Breed: At Pelileu and Okinawa is very well written and almost feels like a work of fiction. Not English, but I would highly recommend Life and Fate if you have not read it. I would second The Cruel Sea - superb book and the old black-and-white film captures it perfectly (wonderful Rawsthorne music too!).